Category Archives: Property Market / Real Estate

Sentosa Cove home sales fell 50% in 2011

Sentosa Cove failed to deliver good home sales numbers on the back of a general slowdown in the luxury property sector.

According to consultants, the changing trend is due to attractive deals being offered in other areas, a lack of new launches on Sentosa and foreign buyers being deterred by the additional buyer’s stamp duty (ABSD).

Alan Cheong, Research Head of Savills Singapore, noted that since the start of 2011, Sentosa Cove recorded just 30 landed home transactions compared to 2010’s 62.

Including non-landed homes, a total of 101 transactions were recorded last year, while 203 were seen in 2010.

“The lack of new launches doesn’t create activity and sometimes dampens market interest instead,” said Cheong. He added that buyer interest has been affected by other launches on the mainland.

“The sales at current launches have stalled because all the units with pro-sales attributes have been taken up.”

Good deals in prime districts 9, 10 and 11 might have also distracted potential buyers.

For instance, units at the 99-year leasehold d’Leedon condominium in Farrer Road are priced from S$1,450 psf to S$1,600 psf, while condos at Sentosa Cove are going at an average price of S$2,000 psf.

The Urban Redevelopment Authority’s (URA) data for Q1 shows that around 1,559 uncompleted private luxury homes were sold since last year, down from 2010’s 3,946 units.

Cheong stressed that the drop in sales at Sentosa Cove is “part of an islandwide phenomenon for high-end homes”, in addition to the effects of the recent cooling measures.

“(It) does not reflect the loss of popularity of the island as an investment destination,” he said.

Source : PropertyGuru – 2012 Jun 18

Building laws need larger scope

I read with interest the report “‘Proxy wars’ in condos” (June 11).

As many Singaporeans now reside in strata title homes, including those hived off from public housing, it is timely that the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) is reviewing the Building Maintenance and Strata Management Act. This should include enlarging the scope of duties carried out by the Strata Titles Board.

For a start, it should hear cases between management councils and developers, besides hearing only cases between residents and councils.

This would free the courts for major cases that would develop the legal fraternity and Singapore as an arbitration hub, rather than be constrained by such domestic issues.

Before a development is allowed, architects are required to seek approval from the BCA. In turn, it requires the building plans to be submitted to the Fire Safety Bureau, the sewerage and drainage departments and other authorities for approval of aspects of building design of which the BCA is not the sole authority.

As the coordinating body for the final approval of building works, it could thus intervene to get sub-standard works rectified before a Temporary Occupation Permit is issued.

If ancillary works, such as swimming pools, tennis and squash courts, car park wash bays, gymnasiums and playgrounds could be sanctioned, then arbitration, if any, would be kept to a minimum.

Ancillary works that are often defective are found mostly in common areas that do not require the BCA’s approval. This is where home owners are at the short end of the stick.

Management councils now use the maintenance fund to obtain legal redress against developers that provide these sub-standard works.

This could be made unnecessary by requiring developers to obtain approval for ancillary works, too.

It is time-consuming, costly and not right to use maintenance funds to seek legal redress.

from Gilbert Tan Hee Khian

Source : Today – 2012 Jun 18